Monday, July 28, 2014

CHINA DEALING WITH MASSIVE ILLEGAL GMO RICE CONTAMINATION

China’s State Media Reveals Unapproved Genetically Modified Rice Is on the Market

CCTV, China’s state broadcaster, has discovered genetically modified
rice being sold in two southern provinces, the second such allegation it
has made in two years at a time when public opinion seems to have hardened against the technology.

Source: Global VoicesAn investigative report aired last Saturday said GM
rice was found in the market in southern Hubei and Hunan province,
where rice remains the staple food. The allegation by the television
network has been substantiated by the Beijing Entry-Exit Inspection and
Quarantine Bureau after samples taken from the two provinces tested
positive for GM traces.

Genetically modified organisms (GMOs) have stirred an ongoing global
debate since their introduction two decades ago. As a deteriorating
environment and decreasing arable land continue to threaten the
country’s ability to feed the world’s biggest population, China is
looking at various measures including GMO technology to cement its
agricultural security.In China, GM technology was named as
one of the key projects part of the National Medium and Long-term
Science and Technology Development Plan, which runs through 2020, and
Beijing has vowed to invest altogether 20 billion Yuan in major GM research.

In a landmark decision to advance GM technology, the Chinese Ministry
of Agriculture in 2009 granted safety certificates to two strains of GM
rice and one GM maize — a move widely interpreted as a signal that the
country might soon apply GM technology to its staple food.

But GM rice is an especially sensitive because it is widely consumed
in much of southern China and by a vast majority of Han people in the
north.

The Chinese Ministry of Agriculture maintains that
GM rice is still at a research stage and said any commercialisation of
it would be illegal. Despite that, CCTV’s report over the weekend, if
proved to be true, would highlight the management hiccups behind a
state-backed undertaking that might take years to get public on board.

“I think the [GM] technology has already spread out and once GM
products are out, it’s hard to recall them [...] most of the rice in
Hunan, Hubei, Anhui and Fujian have been contaminated,” the broadcaster quoted a Shanghai-based rice company executive as saying towards the end of the special report.

China is already
the world’s largest importer of GMO soybean, with annual imports
accounting for about 60 percent of global traded soybean.